--WB Scribbler
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Over the Hedge: Wood Badge Critters of Another Sort?
--WB Scribbler
Tuesday, December 8, 2009
Wood Smoke: New Wood Badge Patrol Medallions
The WB Scribbler notes that now available from the Northwest Territorial Mint, Northwest Territorial Mint Wood Badge Patrol Medallions. Each medallion is minted in a bronze alloy with colorful enamel highlights. Wood Badge Patrol Medallions include Antelope, Bear, Beaver, Buffalo, Bobwhite, Eagle, Fox, and Owl. $11 each, they can be ordered directly from the company's website. Mike Maisen, copywriter for the Northwest Territorial Mint, spotted our unsolicited testimonial for their medallions and wrote to tell us about two other items they produce:
· Wood Badge Hiking Medallions: These feature the same Patrol Animals as the Medallions, but made to quickly and easily fix to a Scouter’s Hiking Staff.
· The BSA® 100 Years of Scouting Calendar Medal. This is a great collector’s piece that celebrates Scouting’s Big Birthday.
These are quality items make fine gifts that any Scouter or Wood Badge collector would love to receive. Give Mike a call; I'm sure he would love to take your order!
Toll-Free 800-344-6468 | Direct 253-833-7780 x 1044 | Fax 253-735-2210|Email mikem@nwtmint.com
Monday, November 30, 2009
Wood Smoke: Wood Badge Website Recommended
The WB Scribbler recommends an excellent site on the history of Wood Badge, Colin "Johnny" Walker's Scouting Milestones. The Wood Badge section includes information on early Wood Badge regalia, including a picture of Baden-Powell's original beads. The origins of the beads, the woggle and scarf is covered, and detailed information on the first Training Course for Scoutmasters held at Gilwell Park in 1919 is included.
Go to: http://www.scoutingmilestones.btinternet.uk/woodbadge.htm. Go check it out, sign his guestbook and leave a comment or two.
Saturday, November 28, 2009
The Weather Rock Exposed!
The Weather Rock is a prop used to make fun of the intricate technology used to create modern weather forecasts, as well as the fact that their accuracy is still not perfect, or even good, in the eyes of some. Often there is a great deal of fanfare pertaining to the proliferation of the notion that the pilfering of the "weather rock" will result in the insurance of terrible consequences. The joke varies, but in all cases there is a large noticeable rock or similar object, often suspended from a tripod, particularly within scout camps or with related activities. A sign next to it states something like:
- If rock is wet, it is raining.
- If rock is green, it rained a while ago.
- If rock is white, it is snowing.
- If rock is shaking, there is an earthquake.
- If rock is dry, the weather is fair.
- If rock is swinging, it's windy.
- If rock is warm, the sun is out.
- If rock is not visible, it's dark outside.
- If rock is under water, there is a flood.
- If rock is gone, there is a tornado (Run!!)
NASA Sent the Weather Rock to Mars
The WB Scribbler recently learned that NASA sent the weather rock, or at least a version of it, to Mars. The 2007 Phoenix Mars Lander included in its meteorological package a low-tech device called a Telltale. The Telltale is a passive wind indicator developed for the Mars lander and constructed at the Mars Simulation Laboratory at Aarhus University. Here's how NASA describes it: "The Telltale consists of a gallows arm that is mounted on the Meteorological Mast of the Lander. The active element of the instrument is an extremely lightweight Kapton tube hanging on woven Kevlar fiber. A mirror is mounted below the active part to enable better direction information. Images of the instrument will show the deflection of the Telltale due to the wind."
--WB Scribbler thanks Wiki, the Internet Encyclopedia and the NASA Mars Laboratory for the above information and pictures. We promise not to get them wet. The Scribbler wonders where the weather forecasting plaque is mounted on the Lander...
Friday, November 27, 2009
Wood Smoke: 1st Gilwell Park Newsletter #2
The 1st Gilwell Park Group recently released its second newsletter, now called The Kudu Horn. Their first newsletter called for suggestions for naming the new Gilwell Park Group's newsletter (your WB Scribbler submitted "The Gilwell Park Scrib Sheet" or "The Gilwell Park Gazetteer") but they failed to win out over "The Kudu Horn" suggested by several Wood Badgers from other parts of the world. Whatever it's named, the newsletter is a great read for those interested in the "home" of worldwide Scouting.
http://1stgilwellpark.org.
--WB Scribbler
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Cape Gilwell-On-The-Lea
Official photos from WB Photographer John Morgenstern made available to the WB Scribbler provide a rare window into a little-understood Wood Badge frivolity—the Rocket Competition (Inter-patrol Activity). Before you scroll down, gentle readers, you are warned that some photographs below may not be suitable for way younger, more mature audiences. Despite appearances, no critters were harmed in any launches.
WB Scribbler Suiting Up: "Let's see, one leg goes in this side, the other in the other side... dang, now the zipper's on the back side, ok, the hard hat goes on the top. 10,9...3,2,1. Let'er rip!"
Launch Inspectors Rick Bamberger and the WB Scribbler check the rear exit hole of Tyvek Minnie's (Owl Patrol ? ) rocket for any carbonated waxy buildup before her date with destiny on the launchpad. Two follicle-challenged Launch Controllers (Bud Dorr and Randy Gibbon), throwing caution to the wind, appear in the background without their sun-blocking headgear.
Tom Davis, Emeritus Course Director (NE-3-176), presents the Staffers entry for inspection. (Don't look now, Tom, but I think your substage launch balloon just fizzled!) Members of the Owl Patrol offer up one of their own as a kind of "good luck" token for a successful launch.
- When this old world starts getting me down,
- And people are just too much for me to face—
- I climb way up to the top of the stairs
- And all my cares just drift right into space ...
- WB-NASA Crack Observer Team Conferencing Before Lunch, er, Launch.
- Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius
- Jimmy Neutron, Boy Genius, of cable, cartoon and movie fame, made a brief personal appearance at Cape Gilwell's-on-the-Lea's Self-Congratulatory Staff Dinner, thanks to Gifted Awards Chairman Tom Davis. Before rocketing off on another adventure, the WB Scribbler was able to get a short interview with the carrot-topped character. Look for our exclusive interview coming to a favorite blog near you soon!
Monday, November 16, 2009
[left to right] Bill McDonald, Gloria Gibbon, Nancy Langenegger, Patti Dibble, Ralph [Trey] Miller, Jr., Ed Dibble [(seated], Harry [Bud] Dorr, Rick Bamberger, Tom Davis, Randy Gibbon, Nadine Harrison, Lois Love, Patt Svoboda [proud Scribe], Bill Babbage, Amy White, Steve DeHart, Wayne Christensen,
Jane Bamberger,
Donald Tuttle [WB Scribbler]
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Wood Smoke: Wood Badge in the News
The WB Scribbler notes that nearly 1,200 registered Wood Badgers will be receiving their first e-newsletter from 1st Gilwell Park this week. With the new website now ready, there is now one central place for Wood Badgers from all corners of the world to join together and be members of the largest Scout Group in the world - the 1st Gilwell Park Scout Group. The group is open to anyone who has earned Wood Badge beads, though I gotta warn you, every Wood Badger who joins is challanged to find another 10 and encourage them to register on the website. Go sign up and stop getting your Gilwell Park news secondhand from the WB Scribbler!
Check out their new site at: www.1stgilwellpark.org.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
World Friendship Fund
Through the World Friendship Fund, voluntary contributions of Scouts and leaders are transformed into cooperative projects that help Scouting associations in other countries to strengthen and extend their Scouting programs. The World Friendship Fund gives the youth members of the Boy Scouts of America an opportunity to help fellow Scouts who are in need of their support. It teaches Scouts that Scouting is global. Since the inception of the World Friendship Fund, American Scouts and leaders have voluntarily donated more than $1 million to these self-help activities.
The World Friendship Fund was developed during the closing days of World War II. At that time, there was a great need to rebuild Scouting in those nations that had been wracked by war and were just emerging from the shadows of totalitarianism.
Over the years, this fund has provided Scouts from around the world with Scouting literature, uniforms, summer camp equipment, computers, and other Scouting-related supplies.
Through the World Friendship Fund, voluntary contributions of Scouts and leaders are transformed into cooperative projects that help Scouting associations in other countries to strengthen and extend their Scouting programs.
Types of projects include providing adult leader training for Scout leaders to attend a Scouting seminar in Geneva, supporting community development projects in Uruguay and Bolivia, providing funds for eastern European nations to help reorganize Scouting, and funding the production of the Russian Scout handbook.
Collections for the World Friendship Fund can be organized during camporees, roundtable meetings, den and pack meetings, summer camping programs, blue and gold banquets, Wood Badge or other leader training, or any other Scout activity.
World Friendship Fund kits and brochures are available through the International Department of the BSA.
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
The Magic of the Campfire
"Oh, the magic of the campfire! No unkind feeling long withstands its glow. For men to meet at the same campfire is to come closer, to have better understanding of each other, and to lay the foundations of lasting friendship. "He and I camped together once!" is enough to explain all cordiality between the men most wide apart, and Woodcraft days are days of memories happy, bright and lifelong."
--Two Little Savages, Ernest Thompson Seton
On Perserverance
It Couldn't Be Done
Somebody said that it couldn't be done,
But he with a chuckle replied,
That maybe it couldn't, but he would be one,
Who wouldn't say so till he tried.
So he buckled right in with a trace of a grin,
On his face; if he worried he hid it.
He started to sing, he tackled the thing,
That couldn't be done, and did it.
Somebody scoffed: "Oh you'll never do that;
At least, no one ever has done it."
But he took off his coat and he took off his hat,
And the first thing he knew, he'd begun it.
With the lift of his chin and a bit of a grin,
Without any doubting or 'quiddit',
He started to sing as he tackled the thing,
That couldn't be done ... and he did it.
There are thousands to tell you it cannot be done,
There are thousands to prophesy failure;
There are thousands to point out to you, one by one,
The dangers that wait to assail you.
But just buckle in with a bit of a grin,
Just take off your coat and go to it;
Just start to sing as you tackle the thing,
That cannot be done and you'll do it.
--Edgar A. Guest
--borrowed from Terrie's Roundtable Resources, Gilwell Spirit Webring.
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Edgar Albert Guest, the People's Poet
Edgar Albert Guest (August 20, 1881, Biringham, England to August 5, 1959, Detroit, Michigan) (aka Eddie Guest) was a prolific American poet who was popular in the first half of the 20th Century and became known as the People’s Poet.
In 1891, Guest came with his family to the United States from England. After he began at the Detroit Free Press as a copy boy and then a reporter, his first poem appeared December 11, 1898. He became a naturalized citizen in 1902. For 40 years, Guest was widely read throughout North America, and his sentimental, optimistic poems were in the same vein as the light verse of Nick Kennedy, who wrote syndicated columns during the same decades.
From his first published work in the Detroit Free Press until his death in 1959, Guest penned some 11,000 poems which were syndicated in some 300 newspapers and collected in more than 20 books, including A Heap o' Livin' (1916) and Just Folks (1917). Guest was made Poet Laureate of Michigan, the only poet to have been awarded the title.
--more at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Guest; the WB Scribbler says a book of Guest's poems is the perfect tonic for a cold, gray winter day; his poetry lets you savor a really bad mood in front of a warm fire and come out smilin'!
--WB Scribbler
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Sunday, November 1, 2009
Original Wood Badge Bead on Ebay?
Patcheller Bruce McCrea spotted a four bead set closing today (Sunday, November 1, 2009) for over $1000. Go to http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/
Color the WB Scribbler green with envy...
Friday, October 30, 2009
Robert Stephenson Smyth Baden-Powell
Death: Jan. 8, 1941
Burial: St. Peter's Churchyard
Nyeri, Kenya, Africa
His experiences at Mafeking, in which young teenage boys were made into a "cadet corps" to carry messages, often under fire, thus relieving soldiers to serve at the front lines, convinced him of the worth of young boys in their patriotism and valor. Upon returning to England, he saw that British boys needed more physical training and outdoor experience than they were receiving in the then-existing youth programs, and in 1907, he started the Boy Scout movement. With the help of his sister, Agnes Baden-Powell, he organized the Girl Guides (in many countries, the Girl Scouts) movement two years later. Scouting quickly spread to other nations, and Baden-Powell quickly became influential in setting up scouting movements across the globe, while organizing the International Scouting Council.
He would retire from the Army in 1910, to devote himself to being the "Chief Scout of the World." His original book, "Scouting for Boys," is a combination of his philosophy of life and of his experiences in the Army, and contains many tips about living outdoors that he learned from native tribesmen. Although his book is heavily tailored on his wartime African experiences, Baden-Powell organized the Scouts to be scouts in peacetime, to learn those life skills that would enable teenagers to grow into worthwhile men and women and a credit to their society, no matter what their occupation would become. A bachelor most of his adult life, on October 30, 1912 he married Olave Soames, who shared his work in the Scouting movement, and they were active in World War I; they would have three children. In 1938, he retired to Nyeri, Kenya, where he died in 1941.
His decorations include the Order of Merit, Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Michael and St.George, Knight Commander of the Victorian Order, Knight Commander of the Bath, the title Lord Baden-Powell of Gilwell, and numerous honorary doctorate degrees and foreign awards.
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Your WB Scribbler had the privilege of visiting B-P's grave in Nyeri, Kenya in 2005 at the invitation of WOSA officials, after attending a Southern Zone Africa Conference in Masero, Lesotho. It is humbling to walk in the small churchyard there and know you are standing at the grave of the founder of the worldwide Scouting movement, an experience I will never forget. Below is a picture I took of B-P's grave. (Sorry, it's a little fuzzy because it's hard to focus when you are all chocked up...)
--WB Scribbler
Blog Value Added Saturday, Nov 1, 2009: From Scouts-L member Lorie McGraw comes this graphic of B-P's "gone home" symbol. Click on the address below and download it to your hard drive.
http://www.troop91bsa.org/images/gonehome.gif
Thursday, October 29, 2009
America's "other illustrator" brought style, drama, humor to life
Not exactly held in reverence like Scouting's Norman Rockwell, another artist also became famous for his use of Boy Scouts in his work. Before Norman Rockwell became famous, there was J. C. Leyendecker. Maybe you need to be of a certain age for that statement to ring any bells. But regardless of your personal time frame, you’re likely to be familiar with the warm, wonderful, dramatic or humorous images that graced the covers of the Saturday Evening Post in the first half of the 20th century.
Many of those images were the work of beloved illustrator Norman Rockwell. However, Leyendecker was there first, and actually there more often. Between 1898 and 1918, he created 48 cover images for Collier’s magazine, and near the turn of the century he produced the first of 322 covers for the Saturday Evening Post, a number that tops Rockwell’s total.
Leyendecker also created elegant advertisements for men’s clothing at a time when dressing for dinner involved far more attention to fashion than today’s “no shirt, no shoes, no service” signs require. His images of cherubic children enjoying Kelloggs’ Corn Flakes were favorites in many American households as well. The popularity of Leyendecker’s illustrations has been attributed to his ability to convey the essence of everyday life through paintings that incorporated high drama, romance and humor.
--contributed by fellow blogger Keith Claussen, October 29, 2009
Saturday, October 24, 2009
Impeesa--The Wolf That Never Sleeps
During the Ashanti expedition he was called Katankye - the man with the big hat.
But his most famous African nickname came from the Matabele: Impeesa - the wolf. It was also translated as `the beast that does not sleep, but walks about at night'. The nickname became famous at Mafeking, where it was translated into English as `The wolf that never sleeps' - a tribute to his reputation as a watchful military scout. At Mafeking, a cannon built during the siege was called `The Wolf' in his honor.
The origin of `Impeesa' is a strange story, however. There are no wolves in Africa, and `Impeesa' means a hyena. It is possible that Baden-Powell misunderstood the word, because to be called a hyena is not a compliment.
But whatever the origins, the nickname of Impeesa, the Wolf, became a great tradition in Scouting, and Baden-Powell used it with pride.
Today, BSA's NYLT youth leadership training is called "Impeesa," in honor of Baden-Powell.
--WB Scribbler
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"Impeesa" is not just a biography of Baden-Powell transferred into comics, but an adventures book in which some of the outstanding episodes of B-P's life, before he founded Scouting one hundred years ago, are narrated. CNGEI has intentionally released it in line with the celebration of the centenary of Scouting and the 150th anniversary of B-P's birth.
The international dimension of Scouting has enabled the book to be published already in four languages: Italian, English, French and Spanish and should there be enough requests, the publisher will also translate the book into other languages.
The series is sold all over the world through Scout stores, bookshops and on the Internet.
Order the book on ScoutStore.com
For more information, please contact the publisher on lizarded@tin.it or visit http://www.lizardedizioni.com/ (Italian only).
Friday, October 23, 2009
A Wood Badge Prayer
Thank you for my Animal Spirit Guide [coach counselor]
and for those who share it with me.
Great Spirit, I am Afraid.
As I have climbed your mountain, I have learned Wisdom.
But as I look at my Guides, I ask myself:
Can I ever have the Sincerity of my Troop Guide?
Can I ever have the Ageless Wisdom of the Instructor?
Can I ever have the Fatherly Love of the Scoutmaster?
How can I ever mean as much to others as they mean to me.
As I look down the mountain at those who seek my guidance,
I feel unworthy.
When I look up to the clouds and see the Spirit in the Quartermaster,
I wonder if I can Care so much for so long.
Great Spirit, I will not let my fear cause me to fail.
But I know I will need help.
Grant my heart wings, that I may soar with the Songmaster.
Grant me Charity, that I may wear the caring smile
of the Assistant Scoutmaster.
Grant me Strength, that I may show the confident Leadership
of the Senior Patrol Leader.
Grant me these, Great Spirit, and I will carry this Learning to every
young man who looks up his mountain and to me his Guide.
I will share your Wisdom all of my days,
until I join my Wood Badge Guides again
and we walk with Impessa through the Lea of Gilwell.
--Daniel Flynn, Wood Badge Course C-35-98.
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The WB Scribbler sez: This prayer is a little too treaclely for the Scribbler's tastes, and he can't remember when he last considered the Fatherly Love of his boyhood Scoutmaster...still, Daniel Flynn's efforts are not unappreciated, if only he would share some of his vast Wisdom and explain the last line! I mean, what does "walk with Impessa through the Lea of Gilwell" mean anyway?
--WB Scribbler
Sunday, October 18, 2009
A Short Pome from the WB Scribbler:
Prunes are purple, kinda
Wood Badgers are as real as
Maple Syruple
Especially if they are not made in
Chin-da.
Discover Your Roots at Gilwell Park
The WB Scribbler would like to remind anyone reading this blog that he is an experienced UK traveler, having once matriculated (1974) at the University of London, and later, served on the World Jamboree International Service Team (2007). He offers his services as a tour guide "back to Gilwell," postage-paid, of course! Oh, Happy Land!
--WB Scribbler
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Bud's Favoite Rockwell: "The Scoutmaster"
Looking for inspiration for a painting about the all important adult Scoutmaster, Rockwell attended the Third National Scout Jamboree in 1953. The result was this classic work, introduced as a Brown & Biglelow calendar selection in 1956, of a Scoutmaster tending the fire as his charges slept peacefully in their tents. The starry blue of the night sky and the dry rocky soil suggest a remote and secluded location but was more likely a sandy patch of landscape at the National Jamboree.
Here's how one of Rockwell's biographers describes the scene:
"The man, muscular and taunt, stands uniformed but he is not militaristic, a policeman of a hunter; he carries no weapon on his person or badge of office. No threats are presented, yet the man stands watch nonetheless, his modestly ringed hand resting on his hip, his stick raking the coals as a gentle wisp of smoke flutters in the nighttime air. The man's face is directed off-canvas, we know not at what, yet his expression reveals no tension; his gaze seems more inward than outward. By the different colored hair of the boys, we can see that they are not his, yet he watches over them as if they were his own.
The small tripod stands over the fire, lashed together with line whose unravelled ends hang out; these are the knots seemingly tied by the hands of a novice. An aluminum pot hangs off the tripod, a coffee pot rests nearby and rocks and small stumps ring the faint fire; hunger or want is of no concern in this scene. Instead, Rockwell presents an image of quiet calm; of a man standing silently as the entrusted leader of future men."
The Scribbler does admire Rockwell's painting for its technical mastery. The pose of the man looks contemplative, the drape of the uniform and gentle billowing of the neckerchief reveals an artist who fully understands how body, cloth, and atmosphere interact with one another. We also admire this painting for its thematic presentation; even if we knew nothing about the mission and history of the Boy Scouts, we can immediately see that Rockwell is depicting a man dedicated to the boys in his care and that this man is the product of specific values and achievements.
--WB Scribbler (Thanks again, Bud, for the moniker!)
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"The Scoutmaster" is Everywhere
Since 1956, Norman Rockwell's "The Scoutmaster" has appeared on the cover of the 5th Edition of the Scoutmaster's Handbook (1959-1972) (curiously minus the background stars), on Boys' Life covers, and the subject of numerous prints, posters and collectors' plates, ceramic figurines and porcelain statues, camporee patches, and even has appeared on a Liberian stamp. Scoutstuff.org sells a "The Scoutmaster"-themed woven tapestry afghan for $64.99 ; the Honor Bookstore sells a framed giclee print online for $99.95 but the original commemorative print from the Brown & Bigelow edition distributed by BSA in the 1960s and 1970s is still available for around $40.00. The original painting done for the 1956 Brown & Bigelow calendar and owned by the Boy Scouts of America hangs in the National Scout Museum in Irving, Texas.
--WB Scribbler
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Another "The Scoutmaster" Connection
In 2005, the Seattle Mariners' head honcho Howard Lincoln related a story connected to the famous Rockwell painting. Lincoln took time off during that season's spring training to catch up with BSA's National Endowment Art Tour at Chateau Ste. Michelle--where some Norman Rockwell paintings were on display. The most famous of the paintings was "The Scoutmaster," and Lincoln had a personal connection to it. Little Howard's 12-year-old face could be seen clearly in the painting, which has been viewed by millions of people over the years, mostly at the National Scout Museum when it is not on tour.
Rewind back to 1954 at a Boy Scout Jamboree in Irvine, California. Fifty-thousand Scouts were packed over every inch of land. "My scoutmaster Del Anderson told me I was going to be in a Boy Scout calendar along with five other Scouts. We went out and pitched a tent and built a fire in broad daylight. Norman Rockwell was there. He explained the scene was nighttime, a scoutmaster standing by the tent, and we would all be asleep. It was 90 degrees in the shade in the middle of the day." Rockwell took photographs that day, and painting from the pictures, turned day into night, complete with stars.
A year later Lincoln got a letter and $25 from the painter, asking him to sign a release. The calendar came out in 1956. Lincoln, who later became an Eagle Scout and more, is positioned to the immediate right of the campfire. He faced forward because he knew that his mother would not be happy unless his face could be seen.
--from a Puget Sound Business Journal article March 4, 2005.
--WB Scribbler again
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Boy Scouts and the Environment
Daniel Carter Beard was a surveyor and engineer in Cincinnati, Ohio. He moved to New York, where he became an author, commercial artist, and illustrator. Beard wrote a book titled The American Boy's Handy Book, which later became part of the first Boy Scout Handbook published in 1911. In 1905, he founded a boys' club called Sons of Daniel Boone to teach boys about nature, conservation, and outdoorsmanship.
On February 8, 1910 Seton and Beard merged their separate boys' clubs into the Boy Scouts of America. Chicago publisher William D. Boyce founded this new organization.
From its beginnings, the Boy Scouts of America had a strong foundation of woodcraft, nature study, and conservation. Many activities in Scouting come from activities of Native Americans. Many of the principles that Scouts uphold come from the conservation ethics of Seton and Beard. The BSA has taught more than 45 million young environmentalists throughout its history. Currently, with more than 1.5 million active members, the BSA continues to train the youth of America in principles of conservation and environmental science.
Source: Environmental Science Merit Badge pamphlet, #33363A, 1998 edition and the Environmental Science Camp Workbook, 2009 edition, by Donald Tuttle. Also: Wood Badge NE-3-188 Conservation Project Planning Handout #2.
--WB Scribbler
The Buckets:"We Got Cars in Cub Scouts Today!"
Used by permission of the cartoonist and distributor UFS.
Friday, October 9, 2009
Scoutmaster's Minute: Flea Training
From: http://www.scoutscan.com/sm_minutes/flea.html
Adapted from a column by Harvey Mackay and posted by Alan R. Houser (troop24@emf.net) on SCOUTS-L - Dec.24/00
--WB Scribbler
Another Scoutmaster's Minute on Failure
--WB Scribbler
Scoutmaster's Minute Defined
--WB Scribbler (inspired, not expired, not yet!)
Scoutmaster's Minute: Failure Teaches Success
--website of Troop 174, Elwood, NY (East Northport, NY), Suffolk Co. Council, Rick Martino, SM.
Monday, October 5, 2009
Public Service Announcement: 100 Years of Scouting!
Contact Info
Website: | |
Office: | BSA National Council |
Location: |
Saturday, October 3, 2009
African Proverb for "Scouter's Own" Service
The “hurry-hurry” person eats goat; the one who takes his time (or hesitates) eats beef.
--Sesotho (Lesotho and South Africa) Proverb
Angora goats are raised throughout the mountains of Lesotho in Southern Africa. Their coats of mohair are a major source of the exquisite wool used in the weaving of Basotho blankets. Sometimes, as a sort of stand-in for cattle, the Basotho do eat the goats. The cow is the animal that the Basotho people prize, love and respect. Cattle are the animals slaughtered on special occasions, the focus of bridal negotiations between families and the chief measure of wealth. The Basotho even have a saying: “Khomo ke banka ea Mosotho” (“A cow is the bank of a Sotho person”).
Thus the goat symbolizes something that is merely economic and rather superficial from a Sotho perspective. The cow symbolizes all that is deeply meaningful about life and family. Goat meat may feed the body, but beef feeds the soul. This proverb (often only the first half is quoted and the rest is taken for granted) is an excellent warning for time-conscious Westerners in time-oblivious Africa. In Lesotho, rift with AIDS, subsistence poverty and early death, life is too short to spend hurrying. Only the person who takes his or her time in life will ever “get to eat the beef,” that is, be deeply satisfied by the truly meaningful things in life. Perhaps we in the West should learn this lesson.
--WB Scribbler
What is Wood Badge?
Wood Badge is a Scouting leadership program and the related award for adult leaders in the programs of Scout associations around the world. Wood Badge courses aim to make Scouters better leaders by teaching advanced leadership skills, and by creating a bond and commitment to the Scout movement. Courses generally have a combined classroom and practical outdoor-based phase followed by a Wood Badge ticket, also known as the project phase. By "working the ticket", participants put their newly gained experience into practice to attain ticket goals aiding the Scouting movement. The first Wood Badge training was organized by Francis "Skipper" Gidney and lectured at by Robert Baden-Powelll and others at Gilwell Park (United Kingdom) in September 1919. Wood Badge training has since spread across the world with international variations.
On completion of the course, participants are awarded the Wood Badge beads to recognize significant achievement in leadership and direct service to young people. The pair of small wooden beads, one on each end of a leather thong (string), is worn around the neck as part of the Scout uniform. The beads are presented together with a taupe neckerchief bearing a tartan patch of the Maclaren clan, honoring William De Bois Maclaren, who donated the funding to purchase Gilwell Park in 1919. The neckerchief with the braided leather woggle (neckerchief slide) denotes the membership of the 1st Gilwell Scout Group or Gilwell Troop 1. Recipients of the Wood Badge are known as Wood Badgers or Gilwellians.
--from Wikipedia, the Free Enclclopedia
Friday, October 2, 2009
Lord Baden-Powell--on duty to God
"The Scout, in his promise, undertakes to do his duty to his king and country only in the second place; his first duty is to God. It is with this idea before us and recognizing that God is the one Father of us all, that we Scouts count ourselves a brotherhood despite the difference among us of country, creed, or class. We realize that in addition to the interests of our particular country, there is a higher mission before us, namely the promotion of the Kingdom of God; That is, the rule of Peace and Goodwill on earth. In the Scouts each form of religious is respected and its active practice encouraged and through the spread of our brotherhood in all countries, we have the opportunity in developing the spirit of mutual good will and understanding.
"There is no religious "side" of the movement. The whole of it is based on religion, that is, on the realization and service of God.
"Let us, therefore, in training our Scouts, keep the higher aims in the forefront, not let ourselves get too absorbed in the steps. Don't let the technical outweigh the moral. Field efficiency, back woodsmanship, camping, hiking, Good Turns, jamboree comradeship are all means, not the end. The end is CHARACTER with a purpose.
"Our objective in the Scouting movement is to give such help as we can in bringing about God's Kingdom on earth by including among youth the spirit and the daily practice in their lives of unselfish goodwill and cooperation."
Beating A Dead Horse
1. Buy a stronger whip.
2. Change riders.
3. Say things like, "This is the way we have always ridden this horse."
4. Hire a consultant to provide an outside perspective to the dead horse situation.
5. Arrange to visit other sites to see how they deal with dead horses.
6. Decrease the standards to ride dead horses.
7. Appoint a triage team to revive the dead horse.
8. Create and implement a training plan to increase the riding ability of those tasked to ride dead horses.
9. Create a link between the state of a dead horse and the environment.
10. Pass a resolution declaring that "This horse is not dead."
11. Blame the horse's parents.
12. Harness several dead horses together for increased performance.
13. Provide additional funding to increase the horse's performance.
14. Undertake a long-term study to see if other contractors can ride it cheaper.
15. Simply declare that the horse is "better, faster, and cheaper" while being dead.
16. Declare that "No horse is too dead to beat."
17. Form a quality circle to find uses for dead horses.
18. Revisit the performance requirements for horses.
19. State emphatically that this horse was procured with cost as an independent variable.
20. Promote the dead horse to a supervisory position.
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--WB Scribbler
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Scoutmaster's Minute: Conservation Is Important
(Pause for answers.)
(Pause here a long while for emphasis!)*
(Pause here while this bit of ecology sinks in.)
--Ideas and Stories for The Scoutmaster's Minute: Conservation is Important, Boy Scouts of America, pub. 1956.
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*Sorry, but the WB Scribbler feels compelled to add a long pause here not in the original SM Minute because he thinks watching a leaf on a sunny day "work its magic" has gotta be the slowest magic show in the forest. Good conservation practices as defined by the Outdoor Code then was considered simply the wisest use of our God-given natural resources. I think Scouts in the 1950s probably didn't worry too much about the moral consequences of trying out a new Hudson's Bay axe on the nearest pine tree or blazing a trail of botanical mayhem through the woods--at least, I know I didn't back then.
--WB Scribbler
Sunday, September 27, 2009
The Outdoor Code
Be clean in my outdoor manners,
Be careful with fire,
Be considerate in the outdoors, and be
conservation-minded.
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As an American, I will do my best to--
BE CLEAN IN MY OUTDOOR MANNERS--I will treat the outdoors as a heritage to be improved for our greater enjoyment. I will keep my trash and garbage out of America's waters, fields. woods. and roadways.
BE CAREFUL WITH FIRE--I will prevent wildfire. I will build my fire in a safe place and be sure it is out before I leave.
BE CONSIDERATE IN THE OUTDOORS--I will treat public and private property with respect. I will remember that use of the outdoors is a privilege I can lose by abuse.
BE CONSERVATION MINDED--I will learn how to practice good conservation of soil, waters, forests, minerals, grasslands, and wildlife; and I will urge others to do the same. I will use sportsmanlike methods in all my outdoor activities.
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--WB Scribbler
Snapshot of John Morgenstern, Wood Badge Photographer
A little "kitchen chemistry" illustrates several of the stories; a glass of water, a few pebbles, and a piece of carbide show the efflorescent quality, the inside difference, of a Scout who shows The Stuff a Fellow's Made of. The use of potassium permanganate crystals to turn water black in A Scout Is Obedient to show what happens when you keep bad company might raise the collective eyebrows of parents and Homeland Security today. A Scout is Clean begins with "Have a lump of coal and as many of its by-products as you can, such as moth balls, perfume, phonograph records, bleach, plastics, nylon, lead pencil, aspirin, sulfa, saccharine, creosote" to equate a lump of dirty coal and its useful by-products with the refining process of living the Scout code. "When we have the courage to stand up for what is right, to be clean, only then do we begin to really amount to something," the Ol' Scoutmaster said.
Are these little stories dated, not relevant to Scouting today? Yes, of course, and no. True, they don't mention the trappings of today's technology like hi def television, cell phones and John's bugaboo, digital cameras, or deal with the myriad of society's ills that plague our youth today. But they do serve as an important reminder that the principles of the Scout Oath and Law remain true, that the qualities of character, fitness and citizenship development in young boys are as important today as they were to Scoutmasters like John Morgenstern 50 years ago.
Thanks, John, for The Scoutmaster's Minute and a snapshot of Scouting a half century ago! We can't wait another minute to see what develops in the next hundred years!
--WB Scribbler